ive been telling people to set their floats on the lean side of
stock well after spending the past week messing around with these carbs with different float levels and jets,
its been the wrong advice.
the engine performs best at the stock setting or slightly on the rich side .2 - .3mm.
with setting the floats on the leaner side i found i was compensating by raising the main and pilot jets because the engine was running to lean,
very minor adj on the floats make a big difference on how the bike accelerates under throttle, as little as .3mm i was noticing the need to go to larger jets, also noticed several other things these became more evident the leaner i set the float settings,
the engines idle would rise whilst sitting at the lights,
the engine would take longer to warm up,
was harder to start,
the engine felt like it was running out of gas under load,
the bike felt like it had no or little engine braking when back off the throttle,
the idle mixture screws could be turned with little effect,
i couldnt hear the mains kick in (slides fully open)
the bike would take off unless the revs were over 4500rpm and the throttle
was cracked more than half way open,
flat acceleration under load under part throttle openings.
once i began to to richen the floats back to stock and then richen in increments of .1mm, the throttle response returned, my back ran best at a setting of 22.9mm at that setting i had strong throttle repsonse from off idle to redline in all gears and good roll on throttle reponse at high revs.
So for any1 i told to lean there fuel settings i apologise, try setting it slightly richer to stock, if youve raised your pilots or mains to compensate, change back to the stock settings and go from there, be particular with the mixture screw settings, the richer the fuel float setting the more accurate the idle mixture screws settings need to be.
the way i checked for the correct float setting was have the bike in 5th gear
with the revs at 3000rpm then crack the throttle to half way, if the bike lags (flat) then takes off its slightle lean, if it bogs then takes off its rich, there should be no lag when the throttle is cracked.
minor adjustment can be made with the mixture screws a quarter of a turn either way to see if there is any improvent,
also with a richer setting the mixture screw should be set closer to stock around 1 and a quarter turned out.
sorry if its drawn out i just wanted to explain why it isnt good to lean the floats out especially as many have been doing it lately.
stock well after spending the past week messing around with these carbs with different float levels and jets,
its been the wrong advice.
the engine performs best at the stock setting or slightly on the rich side .2 - .3mm.
with setting the floats on the leaner side i found i was compensating by raising the main and pilot jets because the engine was running to lean,
very minor adj on the floats make a big difference on how the bike accelerates under throttle, as little as .3mm i was noticing the need to go to larger jets, also noticed several other things these became more evident the leaner i set the float settings,
the engines idle would rise whilst sitting at the lights,
the engine would take longer to warm up,
was harder to start,
the engine felt like it was running out of gas under load,
the bike felt like it had no or little engine braking when back off the throttle,
the idle mixture screws could be turned with little effect,
i couldnt hear the mains kick in (slides fully open)
the bike would take off unless the revs were over 4500rpm and the throttle
was cracked more than half way open,
flat acceleration under load under part throttle openings.
once i began to to richen the floats back to stock and then richen in increments of .1mm, the throttle response returned, my back ran best at a setting of 22.9mm at that setting i had strong throttle repsonse from off idle to redline in all gears and good roll on throttle reponse at high revs.
So for any1 i told to lean there fuel settings i apologise, try setting it slightly richer to stock, if youve raised your pilots or mains to compensate, change back to the stock settings and go from there, be particular with the mixture screw settings, the richer the fuel float setting the more accurate the idle mixture screws settings need to be.
the way i checked for the correct float setting was have the bike in 5th gear
with the revs at 3000rpm then crack the throttle to half way, if the bike lags (flat) then takes off its slightle lean, if it bogs then takes off its rich, there should be no lag when the throttle is cracked.
minor adjustment can be made with the mixture screws a quarter of a turn either way to see if there is any improvent,
also with a richer setting the mixture screw should be set closer to stock around 1 and a quarter turned out.
sorry if its drawn out i just wanted to explain why it isnt good to lean the floats out especially as many have been doing it lately.
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